Imagine a novel that moves ahead with the crazy, unhinged energy of a video game. Imagine a story with more plot twists than a whole season of Lost episodes. Imagine a style of fiction writing that puts Joyce and Faulkner on the back shelf, finding inspiration instead in comic books, The Matrix movies, and bad acid trips.
No, don’t bother imagining it. Just pick up a Matt Ruff novel. Let’s be honest: subtlety is not Ruff’s long suit. His first novel, The Fool on the Hill, was just your typical college novel (set on the Cornell campus)... well, typical except for a cast of characters that included telepathic animals, elves, evil rats, dragons and a pagan deity. In his follow-up effort, Sewer, Gas & Electric, Ruff actually brings Ayn Rand back to life, and holds her spirit captive in a hurricane lamp. Can you say “Atlas Unplugged”?
But how do you top this? Do we even want to? Well Ruff gives it a go in Bad Monkeys. Here is a classic battle between Good and Evil (I told you Ruff is not much for subtlety) as told by Jane Charlotte, currently in the psychiatric ward of a Las Vegas jail, where she is held on murder charges. But is she really Jane Charlotte? Is this really a jail? Can you believe anything she is saying? Is she really crazy?
Certainly her story is crazy enough, as Charlotte recounts it to Dr. Richard Vale, a charming man in a white coat who listens attentively and occasionally points out inconsistencies and implausible details. In fact, her whole story is rather implausible. Charlotte claims to be a member of a secret organization devoted to the elimination of Evil (with a capital ‘E’). She describes her recruitment and training, her weapons and missions, and the structure of her secret society – with its peculiar sub-departments known as Bad Monkeys, Scary Clowns, Random Acts of Kindness and other equally intriguing appellations.









Article comments
1 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net , which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States, and to Boston.com. Nice work!